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The Brothers Comatose

The Brothers Comatose
W/ NATALIE SPEARS
February 27 @ 8:00 pm – 11:59 pm
$33 MEMBER / $38 ADVANCE / $48 DAY OF
STANDING ROOM SHOW / 18+ VALID PHOTO ID REQUIRED

ALL TICKET SALES ARE FINAL
Limit of 6 tickets per purchaser
MEMBER TICKET PRICING ENDS AFTER 4 TICKETS
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UNDERWRITTEN BY
ABOUT THE BROTHERS COMATOSE
Genre: Bluegrass / Folk
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Fusing old school string band instrumentation with rock and roll exuberance, The Brothers Comatose cement their status as standard bearers of a thriving, innovative West Coast roots movement on their intoxicating new album, Golden Grass. Recorded with co-producers Greg Holden and Tim Bluhm, the collection is as diverse and enthralling as the California landscape itself—at times carefree and breezy, at times wild and rugged—with lush, organic arrangements full of rich vocal harmonies and driving guitar, fiddle, banjo, mandolin, and upright bass. While the record marks the group’s first release with newest member Addie Levy, the result is quintessential Brothers Comatose: a warm, joyful reflection on identity and the ties that bind from a band that knows exactly who they are (and exactly where they come from).
Founded by Ben and Alex Morrison in 2008, The Brothers Comatose first emerged from San Francisco with their 2010 debut, Songs From The Stoop, which helped earn dates with the likes of Gillian Welch & David Rawlings, Greensky Bluegrass, and Trampled By Turtles. In the decade-and-a-half that followed, the critically acclaimed quintet would go on to release five more full-length LPs, rack up nearly 50 million streams, land festival slots at Outside Lands, High Sierra, and Hardly Strictly Bluegrass, tour with Lake Street Dive, The Devil Makes Three, and Yonder Mountain String Band, and build up a devoted following thanks to their raucous live shows and relentless schedule.
ABOUT NATALIE SPEARS
WEBSITE / YOUTUBE / INSTAGRAM / SPOTIFY

It’s the quiet awe of wild places that most animates Natalie Spears’ music. Outside her home in Colorado’s Roaring Fork Valley, she listens to the language of birds, notices patterns of migration and sees the cosmos in the countryside. For Spears, the natural world offers a constant invitation to open the aperture of life to something wider, something wilder. Her most recent album, “ Hymn of Wild Things,” chronicles her experience of wonder, loss and metamorphosis. This is a collection of songs about the intimate corners of humanity, hers and ours alike.
Spears grew up in a home brimming with music. Her dad would sit at the piano playing Chopin, singing rugby songs, scatting Louis Armstrong ballads and reciting whimsical folk songs from his childhood days in Britain’s East Midlands. Spears started on piano and by fifth grade was lugging an upright bass to school, followed by saxophone and drums. When she moved to Colorado in her early twenties, Spears discovered clawhammer banjo from a co-worker while building straw-bale houses. Old-time Appalachian music is a communal activity, a perfect match for the tight-knit, community spirit of mountain town living. She added banjo to her quiver of instruments and started writing songs.
The title track is an autumnal evensong honoring the Sandhill Cranes that migrate through her home in the rocky mountains. The track is grounded by a hypnotic pulse created by sampling and manipulating field recordings of early morning cranes that Spears collected at a reservoir near her home. “Orchard of Dreams,” is a journey-song about transforming eternal self-doubt into fruits of hope. “Risk It All” is a flirtatious 1930’s jazz-inspired number about a Louisiana dance floor romance featuring piano, bass, drums and a trumpet section, all recorded in New Orleans.
The album is anchored by a song cycle about the loss of her father, which she sings with clarity and tenderness. “He Still Knows” is a reckoning with the onset of her dad’s Alzheimers. Spears writes about his world becoming a gossamer collage and the disorientation that comes with memory loss. With swirling reverse guitar hooks, the production captures the feeling of time bending and life feeling upended. Similarly, “How Far” was written during a later wave of grief, a post-loss ode to all the irrational things you would do to make someone you love come back to life. “To Know The Dark,” sets a Wendell Berry poem to music, a song she has long sung in community. It’s a piece about holding hands with both darkness and light, a candlelight at the end of a triptych of grief songs.
The album was produced and recorded by Juno-winning musician Jayme Stone who also plays guitar, synthesizer, samples and programmed drums on the album. There are cameos by Christine Bougie (Bahamas), Pat Keen (Humbird), Andriu Yanovsky (The Rumble), Kevin Matthews (Gasoline Lollipops) and Eric Wiggs (Jake Leg).
Spears is best-known for her work with fiddling singer Lizzy Plotkin. The duo’s album, “Just Over the Ridge,” was one of Folk Alliance’s top ten charting albums of the year and made number seven on Billboard’s bluegrass album chart. Spears has played the John Hartford Memorial Festival, Blackpot Festival, Palisade Roots Festival, Chautauqua Community House, Crested Butte Performing Arts Center and the Wheeler Opera House. When she’s not touring, Spears can be found writing songs with veterans, creating the space and trust for them to tell their stories and process their trauma through music. Alongside teaching, working with veterans is one of the ways she practices reciprocity—sharing the gift of music that has given her so much. Hymn of Wild Things threads opposites together: love with loss; tradition with innovation; and the human experience with a more-than-human world.
DETAILS
- SHOW @ 8:00 pm / DOORS @ 7:00 pm
- STANDING ROOM SHOW / 18+ VALID PHOTO ID REQUIRED
- ALL TICKET SALES ARE FINAL
- Limit of 6 tickets per purchaser
Presented By: The Arts Campus At Willits
